Summary: The great battle heads for a climax as Aizen joins the
battlefield and faces the Soul Society's greatest captains. Captain
General Yamamoto reveals his true powers for the first time, but will it
be enough to stop Aizen?

Review:

You know, whenever someone introduces a new attack that hasn't been
seen, you think "Oh wow, that'll do the trick." Shinji's Bankai seemed
real mysterious, but of course it doesn't do much of anything against
Aizen. It was really kind of pathetic, if you ask me.
Ichigo makes his big entrance into the battle at last! It was a great,
dramatic entrance, but the attack, might I add SURPRISE attack, was
blocked! What a wasted offensive strike!

When the captains and Visoreds make a stand to protect Ichigo so he
might have his chance to attack Aizen and finish him, it was real bold
and BAM! in your face, but totally deflated when they start falling one
by one.

What is the difference between hate and duty? Swinging a sword for
hatred is only violence, but swinging a sword for duty alone is what a
captain does. Can you guess who made this statement? Well, it definitely
sounds like something Hitsugaya would say. He takes his duty as Captain
very seriously, but he also has a very short temper and he really hates
Aizen for what he did to Hinamori.

When I first saw Captain General Yamamoto battle in the volumes when
Ichigo and company invaded the Soul Society to save Rukia, I thought him
incredibly strong and unbeatable. But in this volume in his fight
against Aizen, he seemed incredibly weak in comparison. It was kind of
disappointing.

With Yamamoto and the other captains down for the count, Ichigo enters
the battle again as Aizen leaves the flames. But if Yamamoto, the
strongest, most powerful Soul Reaper for a thousand years, couldn't even
scratch Aizen, will Ichigo be able to defeat him?About this Manga-ka:

The son of a town council member
in Fuchu, Aki District, Hiroshima. He never took drawing seriously until
he was 17; after reading Dragon Ball he knew he wanted to be a manga
artist. At the age of 18 he submitted his first concept for the series
Zombiepowder but it got rejected. Zombiepowder was rejected multiple
times until Kubo was 22, when it finally was accepted by Shonen Jump. It
did not last long; it was cancelled after four volumes in late 2000.

His
next series, Bleach, about a high school student who becomes a
shinigami and fights hollows, was not such a failure. Bleach began
regular publication in 2001. It has been running in Weekly Shonen Jump
ever since.

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